Opinion
Making too much of the 'right' time
LETTER - A reply to the article 'Sweden can thrive without the euro' asks the question, How can countries such as Sweden, Denmark and the UK have a constructive role in Europe unless they fully participate in a Europe-wide economic system.
ECB Press Conference
PRESS CONFERENCE - Duisenberg confirmed that the recent appreciation of the euro constituted a monetary tightening which went someway to offsetting the half point interest rate cut late last year. He said the EC was right to start the excessive deficit…
ECB must act now
ARTICLE - The article says the ECB must continue to ease interest rates soon to further boost the flagging eurozone economy as the possibility of deflation in Germany is a greater danger than inflation.
Sweden can thrive without the euro
ARTICLE - After Sweden named the date for its euro referendum this article by a Swedish politician says that little enthusiasm exists across Europe for the euro and Swedes themselves are sceptical. It also claims that Britain would be striking a "blow…
The ECB and M3
LETTER - Letter published in the UK edition of the Financial Times on 6 January. The letter "Stubborn ECB does not deserve to be so badly misunderstood" follows an article regarding the ECB's supposed targeting of M3 levels.
Bank of Japan: Losing independence?
ARTICLE - This article looks at the recent initiatives by the Bank of Japan but says the BOJ's independence may be slipping as Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and members of his economic team want a greater say in BOJ policy-making.
CentralBankNet Monday Special Feature
SPECIAL FEATURE - In this weeks special feature, the last for this year, we look back at some of the important stories from 2002 and some you may have missed. From the introduction of euro notes and coins in January to the appointment of new central bank…
Bye bye, Buba
ARTICLE - This article says the ECB should scrap money supply targeting, its "first pillar" and reduce it to the role of an indicator. It also promotes a looser inflation target, with a change to a symmetrical rate perhaps as high as 3 per cent with 1…
Speculation rife on Hayami replacement
ARTICLE - A furor of speculation is blowing through Tokyo as Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi prepares to appoint a successor to BOJ Gov. Masaru Hayami, whose 5-year term expires in March.
Race for BOJ job heats up, private sector favoured
The article suggests that Nobuyuki Nakahara, a recent member of the Bank of Japan's policy board may be in line for the job of governor when Hayami steps down early next year. Nakahara was noted for favouring radical easing policies.
CentralBankNet Monday Special Feature
SPECIAL FEATURE - Mervyn King's appointment as governor of the Bank of England isn't the only change in leadership we have to report. Last week saw three new recruits ushered in to the top spots at the central banks of Brazil, Argentina and the Cleveland…
Howard's way needs to divide
ARTICLE - An article suggests it will be difficult to replace Sir Howard Davies as chairman of the FSA, and describes the UK regulatory authority as the most powerful regulator anywhere in the world.
The Fed's only woman
ARTICLE - An interesting article published by the Buffalo News on Saturday gives an insight into Susan Schmidt Bies of the Federal Reserve Board. Among other things the article reveals Bies is a qualified soccer referee and at first qualified as a…
Interview - Toshihiko Fukui, former dep gov of BoJ
INTERVIEW - The Bank of Japan will maintain a bias toward easing monetary policy to avert any concerns of tightening liquidity in financial markets and promote expectations of a stable financial environment, a front-runner in the race to be the next BOJ…
Britain doing well without the euro
LETTER - A letter from the Director of the Centre for Policy Studies rejecting the idea that Britain must join the euro, asks if an improvement in Britain's wealth relative to her main European competitors may have something to do with Britains exclusion…
Wim Duisenberg reflects on the euro's 1st birthday
INTERVIEW - It's now been nearly a year since the Jan. 1 introduction of the euro. In an interview with Deutsche Welle Radio on Friday, the president of the European Central Bank takes stock of the euro's success.
The high cost of resisting the euro
ARTICLE - In an article the chief economist of the pro euro lobby group, Britain in Europe, says Britain is paying a rising price for excluding itself from the euro.
Ukrainian central banker speaks on dismissal plan
INTERVIEW - Last week, parliament refused to dismiss Ukraine's central bank head, Volodymyr Stelmakh, in spite of a request to do so by President Leonid Kuchma. Parliament is expected to vote on Stelmakh's fate again on 12 December. In an interview…
Japan's Koizumi: Need deflation-fighter at BOJ
INTERVIEW - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said Wednesday the nation needs a bold deflation-fighter to lead the central bank when the current governor's term ends in March, underscoring the concerns falling prices continue to eat away at the…
A new general approach to capital adequacy?
ARTICLE - The Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation on Tuesday released a proposal aimed at replacing the Basel committee's new capital adequacy proposal. CentralBankNet attended the press conference.
Bernankeian Economics
ARTICLE - This article looks at Fed Governor Ben Bernanke's recent speech "Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here" and says it is one of most important speeches on Federal Reserve and monetary policy in the past fifteen years. The article…
Thinking about life after Greenspan
ARTICLE - America's interest rates came under the spotlight again on December 10th, when the Federal Reserve met for the last time this year. At the Fed, as well as at the Treasury department, attention is turning to regime change. This article…
CentralBankNet Monday Special Feature
SPECIAL FEATURE - While economists appear to be increasingly concerned with the possibility of deflation, the hideous reflection of an old enemy, central bankers have been reassuring us that the chances of a Japan style downward spiral are highly…
Central banks must be radical in post-bubble world
ARTICLE - An article asks how conservative central bankers can be turned into radical policy makers, suggesting the problem lies in persuading the public that central bankers really can change their spots.